Saturday, December 12, 2015

The BBC has put out a little series: Why Didn't Christianity Die Out in the 1st C CE? Much of it is focused on the work of Professor Kate Cooper of the University of Manchester. Her most recent bookBand of Angels: The Forgotten World of Early Christian Women, suggests that small networks of Jesus followers, particularly women meeting in small gatherings and houses, helped spread the gospel. From the publication details above, it's clear that the book has traction and has been well received. I'm going to review this work soon for BAR so more soon.

By the first C CE Philo reports In Flacc. 281-2 that Jewish
colonies were settled in “Pamphylia, Cilicia, and most of Asia as far as
Bithynia and the remote corners of Pontus.” More than 50 places in Asia Minor and probably more.

Josephus Ant. 14.213-6 (management of own finances);
14.259-61 cf also 14.235; 16.171 preserves a decree from the first C CE that
probably concerns a synagogue in Sardis although the present synagogue
excavated is from a later period. Differences between the synagogues at Sardis
and Priene show that diversity exists between different Jewish communities in Asia
Minor. Josephus 16.167-8 demonstrates communities paying temple tax.

Openness to women: Smyrna 2-3rd C CE Rufina was
an archisynagogus (CIJ 741), Pompete at Mydnos (CIJ 756); and Jael was a
prostates in Aphrodisias. A higher number of women leaders and donors exist
perhaps because pagan women held significant offices and titles in Asia Minor
cities. “God fearers” exist in Jewish synagogues in Asia Minor: non Jews
associated with Jewish community: adopted Jewish customs but not yet
proselytes. Aphrodisias lists 52 people described as “god-fearers” most have
Gentile names. 9 city councilors were amongst Aphrodisias God-fearers. See also
God-fearers in Tralles, Sardis and Miletus (Acts 13:16, 26, 50; 14:1).

Jews held civic office in cities from 3rd C CE in
Akmonia, Corycos, Ephesus, Hypaepa, Sardia, and Side. From Apamea, unique
series of coins dating from 193-254 CE depict Noah and his wife illustrating that
Jewish influence upon civic life in Apamea was clearly significant.

Non Jews eg Julia Severa established a synagogue for the
Jewish community in Akmonia in mid-1st C CE and thus a patron of the
community.

1) Women as leaders of the synagogue. Inscriptional evidence from Bernadette Brooten, Women Leaders in the Ancient Synagoguehere.

Rufina, Judean, head of the synagogue, prepared the burial–niche for her freedmen and slaves. No one else has the authority to bury anyone else here. Now if anyone dares to do so, that person will pay 1500 denarii to the most holy treasury and 1000 denarii to the people (ethnos) of the Judeans. (10) A copy of this inscription was stored in the archive.

Saturday, October 31, 2015

Abraam the perfected monk: 7th Century gravestone from the exhibit EGYPT: Faith after the Pharaohs currently at the British Museum.

For a review of the exhibit see this link. Ahdaf Soueif make the point that the aim of the exhibit (organised by Neil MacGregor, the museum's outgoing director) is to show "the development of the idea of faith itself, how each of the three great monotheistic faiths emerged from what came before...how faith was articulated and expressed and how it was used--at the level of the state, of institutional religion and of the people."

Vanessa Thorpe in the Guardian describes this gravestone or stele with Coptic inscription for a monk called Abraam.

“It commemorates someone with a Jewish name and yet it bears Christian symbols inside a classical frame next to the ankh symbol, the ancient Egyptian sign of life,” said O’Connell. “What is more, the engraving on it says he was ‘the perfected monk’ and is written in Coptic Egyptian.”

The curators hope the exhibition will show how Egyptian society was transformed from one in which many gods were worshipped to one in which prayers were offered to a single god.

The impression it is likely to give, of a culture in which powerful religious symbolism was jumbled together, is a strange echo of the way in which fanciful writers in the west once saw Egypt. British Romantic poets and novelists often described it as a frightening and confusing place, made all the more mysterious because ancient Egypt was understood to be the origin of civilised European thought, the inspiration for the Greeks, and yet it was situated on the “dark” African continent.